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Physical and bacterial controls on inorganic nutrients and dissolved organic carbon during a sea ice growth and decay experiment. / Zhou, J.; Delille, B.; Kaartokallio, H. et al.
Yn: Marine Chemistry, Cyfrol 166, 05.10.2014, t. 59-69.

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HarvardHarvard

Zhou, J, Delille, B, Kaartokallio, H, Kattner, G, Kuosa, H, Tilson, JL, Autio, R, Dieckmann, GS, Evers, KU, Jorgensen, L, Kennedy, H, Kotovitch, M, Luhtanen, AM, Stedmon, CA & Thomas, DN 2014, 'Physical and bacterial controls on inorganic nutrients and dissolved organic carbon during a sea ice growth and decay experiment', Marine Chemistry, cyfrol. 166, tt. 59-69. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marchem.2014.09.013

APA

Zhou, J., Delille, B., Kaartokallio, H., Kattner, G., Kuosa, H., Tilson, J. L., Autio, R., Dieckmann, G. S., Evers, K. U., Jorgensen, L., Kennedy, H., Kotovitch, M., Luhtanen, A. M., Stedmon, C. A., & Thomas, D. N. (2014). Physical and bacterial controls on inorganic nutrients and dissolved organic carbon during a sea ice growth and decay experiment. Marine Chemistry, 166, 59-69. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marchem.2014.09.013

CBE

Zhou J, Delille B, Kaartokallio H, Kattner G, Kuosa H, Tilson JL, Autio R, Dieckmann GS, Evers KU, Jorgensen L, et al. 2014. Physical and bacterial controls on inorganic nutrients and dissolved organic carbon during a sea ice growth and decay experiment. Marine Chemistry. 166:59-69. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marchem.2014.09.013

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Zhou J, Delille B, Kaartokallio H, Kattner G, Kuosa H, Tilson JL et al. Physical and bacterial controls on inorganic nutrients and dissolved organic carbon during a sea ice growth and decay experiment. Marine Chemistry. 2014 Hyd 5;166:59-69. doi: 10.1016/j.marchem.2014.09.013

Author

Zhou, J. ; Delille, B. ; Kaartokallio, H. et al. / Physical and bacterial controls on inorganic nutrients and dissolved organic carbon during a sea ice growth and decay experiment. Yn: Marine Chemistry. 2014 ; Cyfrol 166. tt. 59-69.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Physical and bacterial controls on inorganic nutrients and dissolved organic carbon during a sea ice growth and decay experiment

AU - Zhou, J.

AU - Delille, B.

AU - Kaartokallio, H.

AU - Kattner, G.

AU - Kuosa, H.

AU - Tilson, J.L.

AU - Autio, R.

AU - Dieckmann, G.S.

AU - Evers, K.U.

AU - Jorgensen, L.

AU - Kennedy, H.

AU - Kotovitch, M.

AU - Luhtanen, A.M.

AU - Stedmon, C.A.

AU - Thomas, D.N.

PY - 2014/10/5

Y1 - 2014/10/5

N2 - We investigated how physical incorporation, brine dynamics and bacterial activity regulate the distribution of inorganic nutrients and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in artificial sea ice during a 19-day experiment that included periods of both ice growth and decay. The experiment was performed using two series of mesocosms: the first consisted of seawater and the second consisted of seawater enriched with humic-rich river water. We grew ice by freezing the water at an air temperature of − 14 °C for 14 days after which ice decay was induced by increasing the air temperature to − 1 °C. Using the ice temperatures and bulk ice salinities, we derived the brine volume fractions, brine salinities and Rayleigh numbers. The temporal evolution of these physical parameters indicates that there was two main stages in the brine dynamics: bottom convection during ice growth, and brine stratification during ice decay. The major findings are: (1) the incorporation of dissolved compounds (nitrate, nitrite, ammonium, phosphate, silicate, and DOC) into the sea ice was not conservative (relative to salinity) during ice growth. Brine convection clearly influenced the incorporation of the dissolved compounds, since the non-conservative behavior of the dissolved compounds was particularly pronounced in the absence of brine convection. (2) Bacterial activity further regulated nutrient availability in the ice: ammonium and nitrite accumulated as a result of remineralization processes, although bacterial production was too low to induce major changes in DOC concentrations. (3) Different forms of DOC have different properties and hence incorporation efficiencies. In particular, the terrestrially-derived DOC from the river water was less efficiently incorporated into sea ice than the DOC in the seawater...

AB - We investigated how physical incorporation, brine dynamics and bacterial activity regulate the distribution of inorganic nutrients and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in artificial sea ice during a 19-day experiment that included periods of both ice growth and decay. The experiment was performed using two series of mesocosms: the first consisted of seawater and the second consisted of seawater enriched with humic-rich river water. We grew ice by freezing the water at an air temperature of − 14 °C for 14 days after which ice decay was induced by increasing the air temperature to − 1 °C. Using the ice temperatures and bulk ice salinities, we derived the brine volume fractions, brine salinities and Rayleigh numbers. The temporal evolution of these physical parameters indicates that there was two main stages in the brine dynamics: bottom convection during ice growth, and brine stratification during ice decay. The major findings are: (1) the incorporation of dissolved compounds (nitrate, nitrite, ammonium, phosphate, silicate, and DOC) into the sea ice was not conservative (relative to salinity) during ice growth. Brine convection clearly influenced the incorporation of the dissolved compounds, since the non-conservative behavior of the dissolved compounds was particularly pronounced in the absence of brine convection. (2) Bacterial activity further regulated nutrient availability in the ice: ammonium and nitrite accumulated as a result of remineralization processes, although bacterial production was too low to induce major changes in DOC concentrations. (3) Different forms of DOC have different properties and hence incorporation efficiencies. In particular, the terrestrially-derived DOC from the river water was less efficiently incorporated into sea ice than the DOC in the seawater...

U2 - 10.1016/j.marchem.2014.09.013

DO - 10.1016/j.marchem.2014.09.013

M3 - Article

VL - 166

SP - 59

EP - 69

JO - Marine Chemistry

JF - Marine Chemistry

SN - 0304-4203

ER -